defy repression.
Havana, April 19 .- Las Damas de Blanco made No.83 literary tea, while beating, violence, insults and a high-profile protest campaign in Havana, confirmed the Union of Free Journalists of Cuba .
In 3-block radius where is located the registered office of the Damas de Blanco, in the central Calle Neptuno No. 963 between Aramburu and Hospital in the district of Cayo Hueso, in Centro Habana municipality, the Union of Free Journalists of Cuba visually confirm the presence of heavy security, which prevented access to the site.
This journalist, was arrested by security agents in civilian clothes to 100 yards away, amid threats of incarceration.
La Dama de Blanco, Alejandrina García de la Riva, was arrested one block from the site, causing the protests of more than two dozen women participating in the Literary Te, who took to the streets Neptune and Aramburu.
The Political Police, organized a protest campaign in response the protest. "I will use in children younger than age 19, insulted us with obscene words." , Denounced Toledo Laura Pollan, leader of the Ladies in White.
The government mobs chanted slogans such as "Paredón, What you have to give is Paredón, dykes, Pin Pon go down the worms."
This reporter confirmed that Toledo Laura Pollan, Berta Soler Fernández, Alejandrina García de la Riva, and Coca Leydi, were beaten by Communist sympathizers.
Damas de Blanco also Yamilka Morejon Morfa, Darelys Velásquez, and Teresa Galván, were stopped a few meters from the headquarters of the group, blocking access the site. Esther Lidia Lima, was threatened at his home by security agents not to attend the tea.
Maritza Castro, Ivonne Malleza Galano, the Support Group were holding detenidas.Durante literary tea, the women from the provinces of Pinar del Rio, city of Havana and Las Tunas, disagreed that INDICATED people in the U.S., use the name of the Ladies in White to found a corporation or business house. By a vote taken
ratified as its representative on the Miami Cuban exile, Yolanda Huerta, co-founder of the group and wife of former prisoner of conscience and journalist Manuel Vázquez Portal. The
women agreed in their determination not to request permission from the Cuban government, to march peacefully through the streets of Havana to demand the unconditional release of political prisoners on the island ..
"The government never recognized us as now, we will require a permit to march." Said Berta Soler Fernández, the wife of Angel Moya Acosta, human rights activist sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Reported from Havana journalist Carlos Serpa Maceira, head of the Union of Free Journalists of Cuba, and correspondent in Miscellaneous Island of Cuba.
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